The household is all in bed now…. the Christmas tree is lit…. the smell of pine wafts through the house….the lingering smell of gingerbread cookies hangs in the air ….my faithful dog waits at the foot of my bed hoping that i will fall asleep so he can hop in with me ….the hour is late ….i lay there restless, trying to hear any sound that would suggest the arrival of Santa Claus — The floor is cold, the single coal fired heater is way out in the kitchen….I have to have extra blankets on the bed — the warmth of the dog helps too —
I have left cookies out for Santa Claus —they are gone in the morning– I am excited about that until I learned it was my Dad who ate them and not Santa — i can hear the winter wind moaning around the outside of the house …. there is snow on the ground outdoors ….the whole town seems like the proverbial “Silent Night,” — not a soul stirring, not even a mouse ….except in my room with my dog and me ….I can’t wait for morning to come ….what is under the other tree in the living room …..what is under that tree for me …. my entire body tingles with the anticipation ….will the Collins bunch show up at dinner time like always, looking for that free meal?—will my friend Jimmy Putnam come over to show me what he got for Christmas and to break at least one of my new toys? — will my Mom insist that I eat breakfast before opening my presents? —
There I lay in that bed, my childish imagination running wild …..never realizing that we were dirt poor and whatever there is under that tree cost my Dad a lot of sacrifice and hard labor — He dug graves at the cemetery for a lousy $35 dollars every two weeks —I got one pair of shoes that had to last for a year —My aunt Ella always sends me a pair of socks for Christmas …My Grandma always gets me a pair of socks for Christmas ….The kids at our Second Grade School Christmas party gave me a handkerchief —Maybe I will get a sled this year —
My dad made me a sled (of sorts) out of wood but when he was demonstrating how it worked on the snow covered cemetery hill, the runners broke and he ended up with a face full of snow and cursing like a sailor and telling me, “I will get you a real sled for Christmas.” —
My dog didn’t seem to care all that much about Christmas …every day was Christmas for him ….. as long as he got a lot of petting and sweet talk and some good dog food, he thought he was living like a king —-which he was — dog food was expensive….he ate a lot of table scraps…I ate a lot of table scraps too …they were called “Left Overs.” — but life was good … we had a roof over our head — the roof leaked sometimes — but leaky roofs are what galvanized aluminum gallon buckets and No.10 galvanized wash tubs are for —
Daddy finally was able to scrounge a few asphalt shingles to patch the roof with ….He found them discarded in the dump at the cemetery — I eventually doze off to sleep remembering the strains of the son I heard at Sunday School, “Oh Little Town Of Bethlehem.” —- Did I mention that my teacher, Nellie Vice, got me a pair of socks for Christmas?
This image is AI-generated and does not portray any real people.
(December 1, 2025) —- I bought myself a slow cooker today— from Amazon —- It will be here Wednesday and I am on anticipatory pins and needles.
I will now be able to turn beef pieces into a lovely gelatinous softness —- great for my recovering gut —-and perhaps a lot of other interesting and delicious things as well. I like the fact that it has an automatic timer and shut off feature… set and forget…
I have been working to increase my daily protein intake… I fear I have been somewhat protein deficient for the last Six weeks…but I can do 90 to 110 grams each day now that I have charted it all out…..Once I am fully recovered, I can up the ante on the protein to 142 grams per day…..the 90-110 grams is the safe low limit for my body weight and for recovery purposes.
Learning to love Greek Style yogurt, Tempeh and Kefir. (Not.) Cottage cheese is a non starter for me —- can’t stand it —but fish and chicken and pork and beef—- well that is another story….. love them all when i can reduce the collagen content to a lovely managable mush….. well almost anyway ….very masticatable …..I have stopped the awful downward body weight slide and have stabilized at 218 pounds without clothing ……I always find it interesting that when I visit a doctor office, they always chart my weight complete with clothing…..an extra 4 or 5 pounds that I did not come into this world with …..strange things that doctors do sometimes.
Right now it is 8:30 PM where my friend, Jim, and I live… and having finished washing the dinner dishes, I am here on the computer and Jim is parked in his recliner in our cavernous living room, in a reclining chair that virtually swallows him, with a throw blanket pulled up to his nose — he is somewhat cold blooded —- and, of course, to save a few bucks (dollars), we keep our thermostat at 67 degrees ……keeps the pipes from freezing in the manse and gives us an excuse to wear sweaters and jackets in the house…..As for me, I recently purchased a large blanket with 100% wool fleece on one side….warm as toast —- but I need a sheet between me and the fleece……It can be a bit itchy.
I would be commenting on the national events except for the fact that all of it is so damned crazy and disjointed and sometimes, in my opinion, even somewhat demented ….so why bother stirring a pot of excreta …..only causes malodorous conditions in the psyche.
MemoriesOf School Daze
Some time during my Fifth year of life, my parents began “Preparing” me to start school. School was a mysterious place to me. It was far, far away and was described to me as a place where wonderful things were happening and from which there was no apparent escape.
I look back now and am confounded because if you look at it properly, I was undergoing my first parental brainwashing session. I guess all parents do that. I did it with my own kids.
I was torn between the emotions of wonder and dread at the prospect of getting a good start at this new thing everyone was calling, “School.” I somehow sensed, deep inside, that it would mean the loss of my endless freedom and would begin the long process of learning something my Grandfather referred to as “Responsibility.” By the time the inevitable confrontation rolled around, I guess I was more or less properly conditioned to accept the idea of “The First Grade.”
I got the point where, even though I had no earthly idea of what I was saying, I would loudly declare to any adult who would show me the slightest bit of attention, “I’m going to school next year.”
There were a lot of side wise glances and some approving looks and a few pats on the head by old ladies. Those attentions and the smiles that accompanied them made the concept ever so much more pleasant for me. There was a lot of encouragement and moral support from the adult crowd.
It was especially nice when some kindly lady would chuck me under the chin and declare, “Oh, you will do well…you are a smart kid.”
Being “Smart” seemed to be some kind of prerequisite for successful launch at school so I began to search for ways to become…”Smarter.”
Enter my accommodating Father who had completed Third Grade at a local one room school back in 1913.
It seemed that my Dad knew everything about everything and would “make Up” facts when the real facts were unclear to him. He began the process of preparing me for First Grade with a kind of “Home Schooling” of his own design and invention. His stated goal was to “Git me smarter in what was necessary in life—Readin, Writin’ and Cipherin.” (Arithmetic). To my Dad, these were the only necessary requirements for acceptable and complete education.
So, my days underwent some changes.
After supper, instead of romping with my dog and my pet pig, I was obliged to sit with Dad at the dinner table and learn to do Arithmetic….on my fingers!
As to the art of Multiplication: We never ventured beyond the Twelfth Table (12×12=) and Long Division wasn’t even in the educational loop for my Dad.
Dad would take a long draw on his ever-present filter-less cigarette and exclaim, with great satisfaction, “Now One plus One equals Two.”
When I paralyzed at that revelation, he placed two vertical hash marks on a piece of paper and demonstrated how 1 + 1 equaled 2.
All this advanced education took place after I had demonstrated my ability to count to Ten on my fingers. I often wondered why toes did not enter into the process. It dawned on me that it was probably impractical to stop and remove one’s shoes whenever it became necessary to count or to add or subtract.
After a few weeks of this intensive struggle, I got pretty proficient at adding columns of single digit numbers, but the need to “Carry” across to another column of figures was absolutely foreign to me.
Dad’s preoccupation with Addition and Subtraction was simplified for me by his explanation, “If you learn to add and to subtract, you can always tell if your paycheck is short.” (Or if there were actually a dozen oranges in the grocery bag.).
My confusion about Math deepened on the day that my Dad explained to me how One rabbit plus One rabbit ends up being Three rabbits.
So, my first days of school were not uptown at the giant red brick structure with the school buses out front and the play equipment in the side lot.
My first day of school was at home with my Dad, my dog and my pet Pig with Mom hovering in the background mumbling some indistinct phrases from time to time to which my Dad would impatiently respond, “Now hush up, Old Woman, the kid has got to learn something so he won’t be lost when he gits to school.”
I always appreciated Dad’s willingness to help me launch successfully but, as it turned out, he was behind the times somewhat and finger-counting no longer would cut it with the teachers.
I had to re-learn everything.
One thing I learned very early on was just how much a teacher loved to get a fresh red apple each morning from some student—like me. (There was an orchard next door, after all.)
HAPPENINGS FOR ANOTHER DAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2025 Another day and another dollar —-actually forget “Dollar” because compared to what it was as late as 2024, it is now only worth 97.1 cents of what it was then…….Inflation is a wonderful thing isn’t it? The more things cost to buy, the better the economy is … when people spend more, then sellers of stuff make more money ….and if that isn’t a great economy I don’t know what is. So what about the “Purchaser?” — The purchaser doesn’t count, has never counted and will never be counted except as someone to exploit, especially by the sellers of merchandise and services, so if you are looking for a break at your favorite retailer, forget it— all those so called “Coupon” savings you think you are saving money on are more than likely (In my most astute opinion) nothing but fractions of artificially-inflated price tags on store shelves to make you think you have saved something when, in most cases, in fact, you have paid even more than you once did before. — Merchandisers are clever at their hypnotic craft……. Yet, they are the “Backbone” of the American Economy, right? (If you think that is correct then just let the consuming masses go on a national boycott of something and you will soon see who the backbone of the economy really is.
Thanksgiving has come and gone yet once again and it was happy for Jimmy and I —-big dinner…..Americans love their big dinners for Thanksgiving, don’t they? Of course I overcooked the turkey but it did not get all dried out and tough so that was some kind of miracle….. yams, dressing (stuffing), banana pudding, gravy, potatoes, carrots, cranberry sauce made with whole cranberries— all the stuff that goes with such dinners and more…..more because Jim is a prodigious cook having spent years cooking at various commercial buffet style restaurants as well as at a big Kentucky university …….My focus on giving thanks this year was, of course, thanks that I have survived my cdif infection for as long as I have and as good as has been granted to me —- feeling much better —- do not know if it is my imagination or not, but I think I am feeling a lot better now….Of course the troubling thoughts do come and go, thoughts such as “Am I really ever going to get over all this so that I can live normally again? (This thing can take months and months to properly resolve after all.) But I am doing the best I can with what has been given to me and my attitude is more positive now than it has been for weeks and weeks.
so my big concern right now is the hope, wish and prayer that anyone and everyone who is reading here right now is blessed in all things beyond their wildest imaginations…..
Recent news suggests that the Pentagon is considering ending its long-standing relationship with the Boy Scouts. Reports, including coverage by NPR, seem to indicate that officials are exploring ways to cut formal ties with the organization. While the implications of this move are still unfolding, it is certainly significant for anyone following developments with the Boy Scouts. Whether this is good or bad news may depend on your perspective, but there’s no doubt it will impact the Boy Scouts community in some way.
I should admit I have no personal history with the Boy Scouts. I was never a Scout myself, so my thoughts are purely observational. That said, it’s always interesting to see how institutions like the Pentagon interact with organizations like the Boy Scouts, which have played a major role in youth development for over a century. The Boy Scouts have long emphasized values such as leadership, outdoor skills, and community service. A change in official support could shift how programs are funded and how Scouts engage with their communities.
Outside of news like this, life today feels a bit quieter. The weather is cold and rainy, which means my companion Jim and I probably won’t be venturing outdoors. Jim especially dislikes the rain, so indoor days like this are our natural choice. Even so, days like these give time to reflect on larger issues, including the news about the Boy Scouts.
On a personal note, I’m continuing my ongoing battle with C. diff, which makes daily routines, especially eating, more complicated than ever. Managing meals has become a challenge because I need to maintain calories while avoiding foods that could aggravate my condition. Raw vegetables, spicy foods like bacon and sausage, and sweets such as ice cream, cookies, and cakes are off-limits. It’s frustrating to have so many restrictions, but staying disciplined is essential for recovery. In a way, I sometimes wish I had been a member of the Boy Scouts, who are trained to follow rules, develop resilience, and learn survival skills. Perhaps a bit of that structured mindset could help in facing everyday challenges like this.
Back to the main story, the Pentagon’s potential break with the Boy Scouts raises questions about the future of youth programs that have relied on military or governmental support. For decades, Boy Scouts troops have benefited from partnerships, community programs, and facilities that helped them grow into responsible adults. If these ties are severed, the organization may need to adapt and find new ways to support its members. This could also spark discussions about the evolving role of the Boy Scouts in modern society, especially as families and communities continue to value structured, character-building activities for young people.
So, that’s where things stand for now—news about the Boy Scouts, a rainy day, and the ongoing personal battles we all face. What are your thoughts on the Pentagon’s consideration to end its relationship with the Boy Scouts? How do you think it will affect the organization and the young people involved?
Share your thoughts in the comments below, and let’s discuss the future of the Boy Scouts together.